Tag: CashCropCycler

  • EDITORIAL: Death Of An MLM Salesman — Brought To You Via Empower Network’s ‘Badass’ Button

    This "Badass Content" on Empower Network was about the tragic death of a key Herbalife salesman.
    This “Badass Content” on Empower Network was about the tragic death of a key Herbalife salesman.

    If you’re an MLM company facing a PR problem or a crisis involving the firm and its distributors, don’t expect fellow MLM firm Empower Network to solve it for you. In fact, it’s probably prudent to expect that Empower Network will only magnify your bad press or virally blab the things you’re trying to keep in-house.

    To the uber-bizarre Empower Network, the sudden death of a top Herbalife distributor is “badass content” that plays well alongside other Empower Network “badass content” such as a story posted by “Team America” and titled, “Ingredients for Success: An Interview with Nu Skin President and CEO Truman Hunt.”

    Background

    Herbalife, according to BehindMLM.com,  notified distributors last week about the death of John Peterson, saying in an email that Peterson had died as a result of “a tragic accident at his home in Steamboat Springs, Colorado.”

    “Tragic” was an apt descriptor, to be sure, especially since the New York Post reported that authorities were looking at the death as a suicide carried out with a gun while the MLM trade tries to come to grips with assertions by Bill Ackman that Herbalife is a pyramid scheme. Peterson was 58, married and the father of three children. He reportedly had earned millions of dollars through Herbalife, in part by driving business to the firm through a purported “leads” program.

    Herbalife denies it is a pyramid scheme and has sought to distance itself from such “leads” programs.

    But returning to the subject of all this purported “Badass Content”: The “Team America” post about Nu Skin on Empower Network appears to have been lifted in its entirety from the trade publication Direct Selling News by an Empower Network affiliate interested in getting more sign-ups for Empower Network by using DSN’s Nu Skin story as a lure.

    Meanwhile, Herbalife’s in-house announcement about the death of Peterson appears also to have been cherry-picked by Empower Network affiliates, reposted on Empower Network’s Blogging platform, repurposed as “Badass Content” and used to lure sign-ups for Empower Network.

    When one clicks the incongruous “Badass” button above the Empower Network postings about Peterson’s death, one is taken to a page that in part reads, “Share this Badass Content Now! Click the social network buttons above so all your friends can see this badass content.”

    Yes, really. The death of an Herbalife pitchman in the prime of his life while his family grieves qualifies as “Badass Content” on Empower Network.

    Another part of the message points visitors to a domain styled “BadassContent.com,” which is registered in the name of David Sharpe of Empower Network LLC. Sharpe is one of EmpowerNetwork’s purported founders, and the LLC is listed as a Florida company with Sharpe as one of its two managers. When the PP Blog tried to visit the “badass” URL about Peterson’s death, the McAfee SiteAdvisor security software used by the Blog issued a “Suspicious Site” warning and a message that in part read, “When we visited this site, we found it exhibited one or more risky behaviors.”

    McAfee SiteAdvisor warning about "badass" domain. Red highlights by PP Blog.
    McAfee SiteAdvisor warning about “badasscontent” domain. Red highlights by PP Blog.

    Empower Network also appears to control a domain styled BadassButton.com.

    On Aug. 12, the PP Blog reported that a video playing on YouTube sought to drive traffic to Empower Network by depicting U.S. Vice President Joe Biden as a recent enrollee in the bizarrely named CashCropCycler HYIP “program” who confesses to President Obama that he’s “[j]ust out bumbling around and sticking my foot in my mouth.”

    But if you complain to YouTube about Empower Network, according to David Wood, another of the purported founders, there may be hell to pay, so you should “Back the fuck down.”

    “Be warned: BIG, SCARY WARNING,” Wood wrote. “I’m in the process of having lawyers research into whether or not we can sue the shit out of you.”

    Yes, really. Welcome to the MLM La-La Land of Empower Network. It’s like the La-La Lands of Zeek Rewards and AdSurfDaily and MPB Today needed a replacement and that some of MLM’s purported greatest thinkers have decided that what the MLM world really needs is even more madness.

    Read the Salty Droid swearing back at the purported Empower Network “badasses.” (Salty can curse with the best of them, even when they’re planting the seed he should be executed with a shotgun.)

    Can there be any doubt that MLM is just asking for it?

    One self-described Christian pastor and Empower Network promoter on YouTube tells his audience that there’s money to be made in Empower Network, despite all the swearing. Just tune it out and recognize that swearing is a personal choice and hardly is limited to the MLM sphere, he instructs.

    “This is just an open environment where we accept everybody of all types of beliefs, whether you’re a Christian or an Atheist or a Jew or a Muslim — or, you know, you . . . believe in Scientology and all that good stuff,” the pastor explains.

    He added that he looked at network marketing in general as an “opportunity to be able to advance the kingdom of God” and at Empower Network in specific as a “vehicle to help you to get the money that God wants you to have so that you can advance the kingdom of God.”

    Had the pitch for Empower Network appeared on Empower Network instead of YouTube, the pastor could have given his God talk its very own “Badass” button (with a representation of a human skull included) to drive traffic.

    The only remaining mysteries, we suppose, is whether God, being God, would have cared enough to solve the little problem McAfee has with the “badass” domain  — and whether He’d be offended that His name, once again, was being used to promote an MLM “program.”

    Did we tell you that the PP Blog received information today that strongly suggested that some “sovereign citizens” were pitching a scheme by which winners in the Zeek Rewards MLM scheme, which the SEC has described a year ago as a $600 million fraud, could short-circuit “clawback” litigation from the court-appointed receiver?

    We’ll keep you up to date as that MLM La-La Land story develops.

     

     

     

  • How Bizarre Will MLM Get? YouTube Video That Drives Traffic To Empower Network Feeds On Name Of ‘CashCropCycler’ And Trades On Images Of White House, Obama And Biden

    "President Obama" and "Vice President" Biden in a video that appears to be designed to drive sign-ups for Empower Network, an MLM "program."
    “President Obama” and “Vice President Biden” in a video that appears to be designed to drive sign-ups for Empower Network, an MLM “program.”

    EDITOR’S NOTE: Our thanks to reader “Tony” for pointing out the video described below.

    UPDATED 9:26 A.M. EDT (SEPT. 10, U.S.A.): How bizarre will MLM get? Well, there may be no ceiling: A 2:47 video animation playing on YouTube depicts U.S. Vice President Joe Biden as a recent enrollee in the CashCropCycler HYIP “program” who confesses to President Obama that he’s “[j]ust out bumbling around and sticking my foot in my mouth.”

    The video has a publication date of July 17 and appears to be a bid by an affiliate of the Empower Network MLM “program” to target traffic meant for CashCropCycler and refocus it toward Empower Network. “President Obama” appears to speak with a British accent in the promo, which also features a jab against Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the Federal Reserve.

    At approximately the 0:48 mark, after “Biden” informs “Obama” that he’s just joined CashCropCycler, “Obama” seems to say this: “Bernanke started that one, didn’t he?”

    Some MLMers appear to believe that raising conspiracy theories about the Federal Reserve is helpful to MLM HYIP “programs.”

    A URL below the video at the YouTube site goes to a page at JoinVicNow.com that displays a photo of an oversized “Commissions Earned” check from Empower Network for $464,913. The check appears to be dated September 2012. It is made out in the names of “David Wood & David Sharpe” and is presented by an individual wearing a Guy Fawkes mask.

    Source: Sceen shot at JoinVicNow.com
    Source: Sceen shot at JoinVicNow.com

    CashCropCycler, a “program” promoted on the Ponzi boards, appears to have gone missing in recent days. NEOMutual, a purported “crowdfunding” company promoted alongside CashCropCycler on the Ponzi boards, also appears to have gone missing. Both “programs” planted the seed that extraordinary profits would come to enrollees.

    The Guy Fawkes mask sometimes is known as the “V for Vendetta” mask, which sometimes is used by members of “Anonymous,” the so-called hacktivist group associated with DDoS attacks on government and commercial sites.

    Here, in part, is how WikiPedia describes the mask and Guy Fawkes (italics added):

    The Guy Fawkes mask is a stylised depiction of Guy Fawkes, the best-known member of the Gunpowder Plot, an attempt to blow up the House of Lords in London in 1605. The use of a mask on an effigy has long roots as part of Guy Fawkes Night celebrations.

    Why an individual is wearing a Guy Fawkes mask in the photo depicting the Empower Network check is unclear. The company, however, has described itself as “bad ass.” (Also see July 19 report on BehindMLM.com.)

    Trading on the name of the President and Vice President of the United States was one of the things that led to the downfall of the AdSurfDaily MLM “program” in 2008. (The President at the time was George W. Bush; Dick Cheney was the Vice President.)

    After Obama replaced Bush in the White House, an affiliate of an MLM “program” known as MPB Today depicted Obama in a 2010 promo as a left-handed saluting Nazi subordinate to then U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, who was depicted as a whining drunk who’d knocked out First Lady Michelle Obama in the Oval Office. In 2012, MPB Today operator Gary Calhoun was charged in Florida with racketeering. A federal forfeiture complaint that targeted the headquarters building used by MPB Today specified the crimes of access-device fraud and fraud in connection with identification documents.

    Calhoun was sentenced to a three-year prison term last month. MPB Today MLM affiliates claimed a one-time purchase of $200 from the firm could result in free groceries and gasoline for life. Claims were made by affiliates that the U.S. government or Walmart or both had backed the MLM “program.”

    In January 2013, an online promotion turned Obama into a pitchman for a Ponzi-board “program” known as UltimatePowerProfits.

    Some members of the TelexFree  “program” now appear to believe there is MLM hay to be made while trading on the name of Democratic politician Anthony Weiner. TelexFree is under investigation in multiple states in Brazil, amid allegations its is conducting a massive pyramid scheme. Even though there have been reports in Brazil about death threats against a judge and a prosecutor, some U.S. affiliates continue to promote the purported “opportunity.”

    One promo for TelexFree claims a payment of $15,125 to the MLM firm will produce a profit of more than $42,000 in a year. The “Aunt Ethels” of the world — older people with money — will become keen on TelexFree, according to the promo.

  • UPDATE: After Claiming It Was Interested In ‘Building A Network That Ticks,’ ‘CashCropCycler’ Appears to Be DOA; ‘NEOMutual’ Also Appears To Have Gone Missing After ‘Crowdfunding’ Claims

    cashcropcyclerTouted on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum by former Zeek Rewards pitchman “mmgcjm,” a bizarre “program” known as CashCropCycler appears to have tanked. Joining CashCropCycler in the recent HYIP DOA lineup was NEOMutual, a purported “crowdfunding” opportunity that claimed it used bitcoin and a series of offshore payment processors to provide daily interest rates of 1.4 percent, 1.6 percent and 1.9 on sums  between $20 and $250,000.

    The websites of both NEOMutual and CashCropCycler are throwing error messages. Precisely when the sites went offline is unclear. In August 2012, the SEC described Zeek as a $600 million Ponzi and pyramid scheme.

    Among other things, CashCropCycler was notable for its provocative name, which led to questions about whether the “program” was designed as a taunt and perhaps was using the HYIP world to crowd-source the cultivation of marijuana. The “program” also claimed enrollees received $10 just for signing up, a practice once used by the JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid scam.

    cashcropcyclerneoAn ad for NEOMutual once appeared on the landing page of the CashCropCycler website. NEO Mutual said it was located at Revolution Tower in Panama City, Panama. Like the “Profitable Sunrise” HYIP scheme, NEO Mutual purported to be in the bridge-loan business. In April 2013, the SEC called Profitable Sunrise a scam that may have gathered millions of dollars while using a “mail drop” in England and offshore bank accounts.

    sdadprofitablesunriseIn July, the SEC issued an investor alert that warned about the dangers of potential investment scams involving virtual currencies promoted through the Internet.

    “We are concerned that the rising use of virtual currencies in the global marketplace may entice fraudsters to lure investors into Ponzi and other schemes in which these currencies are used to facilitate fraudulent, or simply fabricated, investments or transactions. The fraud may also involve an unregistered offering or trading platform. These schemes often promise high returns for getting in on the ground floor of a growing Internet phenomenon,” the SEC said in the warning.

    Among the strange claims on the CashCropCycler website was that the “program” was interested in building “a network that ticks.”

    A February 2013 ad for Profitable Sunrise that appeared on a classified-ads site in Montana South Dakota (Sept. 5, 2013 edit) claimed that “Finally we have the bomb.” In an April 2013 Investor Alert on Profitable Sunrise, the state of Idaho warned that “Those investors who receive compensation for soliciting other investors may themselves be subject to the licensing and anti-fraud provisions of state and federal securities laws.”

    In court filings on April 4, the SEC said Profitable Sunrise pitchmen may have pushed the “program” without even knowing for whom they were working.

  • HourlyRevShare, Another ‘Ken Russo’ Ponzi-Board ‘Program,’ Reportedly DOA

    krussohourlyrevshareHourlyRevShare, another in a long list of incongruous HYIP Ponzi-board “programs” pushed by serial huckster “Ken Russo” (also known as “DRdave”), reportedly has collapsed after taking a second bite of the Ponzi apple (purportedly as HRS II) after the original iteration collapsed. Other recent “programs” pushed by “Ken Russo” include Zeek Rewards and Profitable Sunrise, both of which cratered after regulatory actions in the United States.

    “Ken Russo” also pushed Felmina Alliance, which became the subject of an Investor Alert in Canada; AdSurfDaily, a $119 million Ponzi scheme that put operator Andy Bowdoin in federal prison in Florida; MPB Today, a scheme that led to racketeering charges being filed in Florida against operator Gary Calhoun; Club Asteria, a scheme that falsely planted the seeds it was endorsed by actor Will Smith and the American Red Cross while also trading on the name of slain human-rights champion Mahatma Gandhi; a scheme known as Gold Nugget Invest that cratered in at least two forms; JSS Tripler/JustBeenPaid, a multiple-name scheme purportedly operated by Frederick Mann that promised a return of 730 percent a year and has encountered regulatory actions in Italy and the Philippines;  knockoff scams known variously as JSSTripler 2 and Compound 150 purportedly operated by “Dave” between purported bouts with Dengue Fever; and Wealth4AllTeam, a “program” that experienced business halts and relaunches with new names, at one time claiming it was impervious to U.S. regulators at the state and federal level while incongruously claiming disputes would be settled under California law.

    Among other things, the lead pitchman for HourlyRevShare on the MoneyMakerGroup Ponzi forum claimed that the “program” offered “Daily guaranteed Payouts.” The promoter also claimed (italics added):

    “Earn 4.5% to 6.5% daily for 20 days.”

    “Earn 135% to 195% on your shares.”

    “Earn 0.18 to 0.29 every hour.”

    On April 9, 2013, less than a month after the Profitable Sunrise HYIP scheme collapsed amid SEC allegations a ghost might have been at the wheel, Ken Russo (as “DRdave”) claimed on TalkGold that he’d just received a payment of $4,850 from HourlyRevShare, which was using a Gmail email address. Critics of HourlyRevShare claim the “program” is linked to individuals known as Analie or Anelie Steinway and Dr. Leiven Van Neste.

    Whether these individuals actually exist remains an open question.

    “Ken Russo” also has been leading cheers for a “program” known as NEOMutual, yet-another Ponzi-board darling. NEOMutual is being pushed alongside a “program” bizarrely known as “CashCropCycler.”

    Also see Comments thread below this PP Blog story on the JSS/JBP-linked ProfitClicking scam.

     

  • BIZARRE: ‘Program’ Dubbed ‘CashCropCycler’ Has Ponzi-Board Presence And Zeek Pitchman While Touting Payouts Through PerfectMoney, SolidTrustPay And EgoPay — And Saying It Provides JSSTripler-Like Signup Bonus Of $10

    cashcropcyclerA “program” with the bizarre name of “CashCropCycler” (Triple C) is being pushed on the Ponzi forums, amid claims it issues cashouts through offshore payment processors linked to fraud scheme after fraud scheme and gives enrollees $10 just for signing up. An earlier HYIP scam known as JSSTripler/JustBeenPaid that appears to have morphed into at least two other scams also advertised recruits would be paid $10 for enrolling in its “program,” which purported to pay 730 percent a year (precompounding).

    Like a series of recent scams, CashCropCycler purports to be a “revenue sharing and advertising” program. It also claims it is using Skype and Gtalk for customer service. The lead pitchman for CashCropCycler on the MoneyMakeerGroup Ponzi forum appears to be “mmgcjm,” the lead pitchman for the alleged $600 million Zeek Rewards Ponzi scheme at the same forum.

    Whether CashCropCycler borrowed part of the JSS/JBP fraud pitch wasn’t immediately clear. Also unclear is whether CashCropCycler’s  unusual name was designed to be provocatively ambiguous or as a taunt of some sort. Could the unidentified Triple C operators be suggesting they are using the HYIP world to crowd-source the cultivation of marijuana, for instance? Other HYIP schemes — CashTanker, BotFly and Insectrio, for instance — may have been named to taunt regulators and demonstrate just how gullible investors can be.

    CashCropCycler curiously discusses the Triple C alliteration in another context, saying “The name ‘Triple C’ came about in year 2012 when we gave all our personal earnings to support the Clarion Children’s Choir, that was the best experience for us as a team.”

    The “program” purports to be operated by “three friends, Americans by naturalization and Swedish by birth; Benson, Dave and Anderson.”

    CashCropCycler’s website defines the trio as “ordinary people who find delight in been [sic] able to help our same human species. It doesn’t matter what country you’re from, what race you belong or how educated you are; we only care to help people by building a network that ticks, and this is what we enjoy doing.”

    Records suggest that one of the domain nameservers (ian.ns.cloudflare.com) linked to CashCropCycler has been used in spam campaigns for everything from malware to potentially fraudulent National Football League jerseys and potentially fraudulent designer purses purportedly from Louis Vuitton.

    Meanwhile, the CashCropCycler Terms of Service includes the strange phrase “Agreements shall be interpreted under the laws” — without identifying a jurisdiction or set of laws used if disputes occur. The Terms also confoundingly assert that “A member is neither an employee nor an independent contractor of CASHCROPCYCLER,” even as CashCropCycler asserts elsewhere on its site that promoters can earn MLM-style commissions totaling 15 percent over three tiers.

    By plowing $10 into the scheme, according to the CashCropCycler website, members will earn “186% in 60Days” [sic]. A sum of $50 purportedly fetches “129.60% in 25days” [sic]. Recruits should feel good about the “program” (apparently) because the “script was tested for 68days [sic] before this official launch.”

    And members also are permitted to engage in “Member to Member Transfer[s]” from inside the CashCropCycler system “for a 2.50% fee,” according to the website. Beyond that, according to the site, members can pay an exchange “fee of 8.70%” should they wish to have their earnings paid through a processor other than the one through which they joined the “program.”

    Some purported exchange services were among the casualties of the Liberty Reserve money-laundering action in the United States in May. Federal prosecutors in New York said that the now-shuttered Liberty Reserve payment processor was facilitating any number of fraud schemes while helping criminals launder billions of dollars.

    Even though CashCropCycler members purportedly are neither employees nor independent contractors of the “program,” they nevertheless are encouraged to (italics added/no edits made):

    “Promote via banner/text advertisements on other advertising websites that you are a member of.

    “Be active on the forums, including MoneyMakerGroup, TalkGold, DreamTeamMoney and Investment-Tracker .

    “Including a link to CashCropCycler in your signature in forums.

    “Traffic exchanges/Safe lists.

    “Social media.

    “Word of mouth.”

    At least four ads that appear to highlight other HYIP schemes appear near the bottom of the CashCropCycler landing page. One of the ads is for “NeoMutual,” which uses a tagline of “we are crowdfunding.”

    Some critics of crowd funding have voiced concerns that easing regulations on certain types of startup companies before appropriate safeguards are in place could lead to egregious marketplace abuses.

    Ads for what appear to be HYIP schemes are displayed on the website of CashCropCycler. A purported opportunity known as NEO Mutual purports to be a "crowd funding" company through which members can use bitcoins and payment processors linked to multiple fraud schemes.
    Ads for what appear to be HYIP schemes are displayed on the website of CashCropCycler. A purported opportunity known as NEO Mutual purports to be a “crowd funding” company through which members can use payment processors such as Perfect Money, SolidTrustPay and EgoPay that have been linked to multiple fraud schemes. NEOMutual also purportedly does business with bitcoins and PexPay — all while employing a “bank transfer” option. NEOMutual purports to have “Junior,” “Senior” and “Executive” plans that pay daily interest rates of 1.4 percent, 1.6 percent and 1.9 on sums  between $20 and $250,000. NEO Mutual says it is located at Revolution Tower in Panama City, Panama. Like the “Profitable Sunrise” scheme, NEO Mutual purports to be in the bridge-loan business. In April 2013, the SEC called Profitable Sunrise a scam that may have gathered millions of dollars while using a “mail drop” and offshore bank accounts.

    Also see CashCropCycler review on BehindMLM.com.